On Wednesday, February 6 at 6:30 PM, join art critic Roberta Smith and curator Jason Andrew at Stanford University's Anderson Collection for a talk on the work and life of renowned artist Elizabeth Murray, and the profound influence she continues to have on contemporary artists today.

The event coincides with the Anderson Collection's current exhibition Spotlight on Elizabeth Murray, on view through March 25, 2019.

Roberta Smith is the co-chief art critic of The New York Times. She lives in New York with her husband, Jerry Saltz, senior art critic for New York Magazine. Since joining the Times in 1991, she has written on Western and non-Western art from prehistoric to contemporary eras. Roberta sees her main responsibility as “getting people out of the house,” making them curious enough to go see the art she covers. Smith was the 2003 recipient of the Frank Jewett Mather Award for art criticism, and was the 2014 Marina Kellen French Distinguished Visitor at the American Academy in Berlin. This year she was the 2018 Clarice Smith Distinguished Lecturer at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC.

Roberta’s first review of Elizabeth Murray’s work appeared in the May 1975 issue of Artforum. She has had a “deep interest” in Murray’s art and has written extensively about her work, including a major essay for Murray’s mid-career retrospective in 1987. Twenty years later, Roberta Smith would write Murray’s obituary calling her a “New York painter who reshaped Modernist abstraction.”

Jason Andrew is an independent curator and producer, archivist and writer. He the founding partner at Artist Estate Studio, which manages the Estate of Elizabeth Murray among others. He first met Elizabeth Murray when she invited him to her studio for advice in organizing her studio archives. A decade later, he was asked to manage her Estate. Through research-heavy Instagram posts, edgy exhibitions, and provoking essays like how graffiti influenced Elizabeth Murray, he has re-introduced the artist to a new generation of artists, curators, and collectors. A prominent figure in the emerging Brooklyn art scene, he is the co-founder of Norte Maar whose mission is to promote collaborations among the visual, literary, and performing arts.

This event is free and open to the public. Doors open at 6:00 PM at the Bing Concert Hall at Stanford University. For more information, please visit the Anderson Collection's website.